[Other -- Oral ]
Chandra Searches for Late-Time Jet Breaks in GRB X-ray Afterglows
David Burrows, Penn State University
G. Garmire (PSU), G. Ricker (MIT), M. Bautz (MIT), J. Nousek (PSU), D. Grupe (PSU), J. Racusin (PSU)
The Swift X-ray Telescope has now studied hundreds of X-ray
afterglows of Gamma-Ray Bursts. One surprising finding is the apparent
absence of jet breaks in the XRT light curves, suggesting that the Swift
GRBs may have larger jet opening angles than those studied before the
launch of Swift.We have undertaken a program of late-time observations of GRB afterglows
by the Chandra X-ray Observatory to searchfor possible jet breaks at very late times, after the afterglow becomes
too faint for Swift to monitor. These Chandra observations push the flux
limits down by an order of magnitude, from ~2E-14 cgs to ~2E-15 cgs. I
will report on the results of this on-going program, which has found
very late jet breaks in some cases, and failed to find evidence of jet
breaks to very late times in other afterglows. The results are consistent
with the recent findings of Racusin et al., that suggest that some jet
breaks occur at very late times but that the opening angles are typically
still of order 5-10 degrees.